Wolf toggling between states

Wandering gray wolf OR-7 is back on the trail locally as he spends the lion's share of this spring as perhaps the most famous resident of the mythical State of Jefferson.

Comment

By Mark Freeman

DailyTidings.com

By Mark Freeman

Posted Apr. 27, 2013 at 2:00 AM

By Mark Freeman

Posted Apr. 27, 2013 at 2:00 AM

» Social News

Wandering gray wolf OR-7 is back on the trail locally as he spends the lion's share of this spring as perhaps the most famous resident of the mythical State of Jefferson.

The 4-year-old collared wolf has spent the past six weeks traveling in and out of Jackson County, venturing into eastern Douglas County before doubling back and earlier this week even returning briefly to California, where he flirted with Interstate 5 traffic for the first time.

GPS-transmitting equipment on his collar shows that, while in Northern California earlier this week, he crossed west over I-5 near Yreka, Calif. — venturing the farthest west he's gone in his 19-month odyssey, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Then just as quickly, he jumped I-5 again, biologists said Thursday.

"Hopefully, he'll stop doing that," says John Stephenson, a USFWS biologist tracking OR-7 from his Bend office. "That's not a good strategy for longevity."

And Wednesday he headed back north, crossing into southeastern Jackson County where he was Thursday morning in the hills south of Emigrant Lake east of Ashland, according to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Each time he enters California OR-7 reclaims his stature as the only known gray wolf in the Golden State since 1924. And when he slips back into Jackson County, he becomes the first known gray wolf west of the Cascades since the last was shot in 1937 to protect livestock.

"Man, that wolf can travel," says Mark Vargas, an Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife's Rogue District wildlife biologist. "The distances he's covering is amazing. He could be back in Siskiyou County (California) as we speak."

This pattern of toggling between Southern Oregon and Northern California is what OR-7 did last spring before crossing into California for what turned into an 11-month walkabout in his on-going search for a new home territory and a mate.

That trek took him as far east as almost into Nevada before this spring he did an abrupt about-face and virtually retraced his steps back into Jackson County on March 12.

But don't read anything into these latest movements, Vargas warns.

"Who knows where he's going," Vargas said.

It seems the world has been watching and wondering the very same since Or-7 left his Imnaha Pack near Enterprise, where young wolves looking for new territory and mates head north or east. Instead, this animal headed south and west, with his lonely search for a companion lobo has been followed on web sites and in news accounts that have hit five continents.

Reach reporter Mark Freeman at 541-776-4470, or email at mfreeman@mailtribune.com.